Andrew C.-H. Sue
Northwestern University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Andrew C.-H. Sue.
Nature | 2012
Alok S. Tayi; Alexander K. Shveyd; Andrew C.-H. Sue; Jodi M. Szarko; Brian S. Rolczynski; Dennis Cao; T. Jackson Kennedy; Amy A. Sarjeant; Charlotte L. Stern; Walter F. Paxton; Wei Wu; Sanjeev K. Dey; Albert C. Fahrenbach; Jeffrey R. Guest; Hooman Mohseni; Lin X. Chen; Kang L. Wang; J. Fraser Stoddart; Samuel I. Stupp
Materials exhibiting a spontaneous electrical polarization that can be switched easily between antiparallel orientations are of potential value for sensors, photonics and energy-efficient memories. In this context, organic ferroelectrics are of particular interest because they promise to be lightweight, inexpensive and easily processed into devices. A recently identified family of organic ferroelectric structures is based on intermolecular charge transfer, where donor and acceptor molecules co-crystallize in an alternating fashion known as a mixed stack: in the crystalline lattice, a collective transfer of electrons from donor to acceptor molecules results in the formation of dipoles that can be realigned by an external field as molecules switch partners in the mixed stack. Although mixed stacks have been investigated extensively, only three systems are known to show ferroelectric switching, all below 71 kelvin. Here we describe supramolecular charge-transfer networks that undergo ferroelectric polarization switching with a ferroelectric Curie temperature above room temperature. These polar and switchable systems utilize a structural synergy between a hydrogen-bonded network and charge-transfer complexation of donor and acceptor molecules in a mixed stack. This supramolecular motif could help guide the development of other functional organic systems that can switch polarization under the influence of electric fields at ambient temperatures.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014
Anthea K. Blackburn; Andrew C.-H. Sue; Alexander K. Shveyd; Dennis Cao; Alok S. Tayi; Ashwin Narayanan; Brian S. Rolczynski; Jodi M. Szarko; Ozgur A. Bozdemir; Rie Wakabayashi; Jessica A. Lehrman; Bart Kahr; Lin X. Chen; Majed S. Nassar; Samuel I. Stupp; J. Fraser Stoddart
Organic charge transfer cocrystals are inexpensive, modular, and solution-processable materials that are able, in some instances, to exhibit properties such as optical nonlinearity, (semi)conductivity, ferroelectricity, and magnetism. Although the properties of these cocrystals have been investigated for decades, the principal challenge that researchers face currently is to devise an efficient approach which allows for the growth of high-quality crystalline materials, in anticipation of a host of different technological applications. The research reported here introduces an innovative design, termed LASO-lock-arm supramolecular ordering-in the form of a modular approach for the development of responsive organic cocrystals. The strategy relies on the use of aromatic electronic donor and acceptor building blocks, carrying complementary rigid and flexible arms, capable of forming hydrogen bonds to amplify the cocrystallization processes. The cooperativity of charge transfer and hydrogen-bonding interactions between the building blocks leads to binary cocrystals that have alternating donors and acceptors extending in one and two dimensions sustained by an intricate network of hydrogen bonds. A variety of air-stable, mechanically robust, centimeter-long, organic charge transfer cocrystals have been grown by liquid-liquid diffusion under ambient conditions inside 72 h. These cocrystals are of considerable interest because of their remarkable size and stability and the promise they hold when it comes to fabricating the next generation of innovative electronic and photonic devices.
Chemistry: A European Journal | 2013
Dennis Cao; Michal Juríček; Zachary J. Brown; Andrew C.-H. Sue; Zhichang Liu; Juying Lei; Anthea K. Blackburn; Sergio Grunder; Amy A. Sarjeant; Ali Coskun; Cheng Wang; Omar K. Farha; Joseph T. Hupp; J. Fraser Stoddart
We report the synthesis of two [2]catenane-containing struts that are composed of a tetracationic cyclophane (TC(4+)) encircling a 1,5-dioxynaphthalene (DNP)-based crown ether, which bears two terphenylene arms. The TC(4+) rings comprise either 1) two bipyridinium (BIPY(2+)) units or 2) a BIPY(2+) and a diazapyrenium (DAP(2+)) unit. These degenerate and nondegenerate catenanes were reacted in the presence of Cu(NO3)2⋅2.5 H2O to yield Cu-paddlewheel-based MOF-1050 and MOF-1051. The solid-state structures of these MOFs reveal that the metal clusters serve to join the heptaphenylene struts into grid-like 2D networks. These 2D sheets are then held together by infinite donor-acceptor stacks involving the [2]catenanes to produce interpenetrated 3D architectures. As a consequence of the planar chirality associated with both the DNP and hydroquinone (HQ) units present in the crown ether, each catenane can exist as four stereoisomers. In the case of the nondegenerate (bistable) catenane, the situation is further complicated by the presence of translational isomers. Upon crystallization, however, only two of the four possible stereoisomers--namely, the enantiomeric RR and SS forms--are observed in the crystals. An additional element of co-conformational selectivity is present in MOF-1051 as a consequence of the substitution of one of the BIPY(2+) units by a DAP(2+) unit: only the translational isomer in which the DAP(2+) unit is encircled by the crown ether is observed. The overall topologies of MOF-1050 and MOF-1051, and the selective formation of stereoisomers and translational isomers during the kinetically driven crystallization, provide evidence that weak noncovalent bonding interactions play a significant role in the assembly of these extended (super)structures.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015
Andrew C.-H. Sue; Ranjan V. Mannige; Hexiang Deng; Dennis Cao; Cheng Wang; Felipe Gándara; J. Fraser Stoddart; Stephen Whitelam; Omar M. Yaghi
Significance Arranging multiple component types in a controlled manner within solid frameworks may one day allow us to combine the heterogeneity characteristic of biological materials with the robustness characteristic of synthetic ones. Here, we report the synthesis of a metal–organic framework whose two component types are incorporated within it in a manner that is robust with respect to changes of solution composition. Calculations done on a model system suggest that this robustness occurs because component types become kinetically trapped during framework growth. Our calculations also show how different controlled arrangements of component types might be obtained by varying their noncovalent interactions, or by varying the topology of the covalent framework within which they are housed. Multiple organic functionalities can now be apportioned into nanoscale domains within a metal-coordinated framework, posing the following question: how do we control the resulting combination of “heterogeneity and order”? Here, we report the creation of a metal–organic framework, MOF-2000, whose two component types are incorporated in a 2:1 ratio, even when the ratio of component types in the starting solution is varied by an order of magnitude. Statistical mechanical modeling suggests that this robust 2:1 ratio has a nonequilibrium origin, resulting from kinetic trapping of component types during framework growth. Our simulations show how other “magic number” ratios of components can be obtained by modulating the topology of a framework and the noncovalent interactions between component types, a finding that may aid the rational design of functional multicomponent materials.
Drug Discovery Today | 2017
Wei Wang; Andrew C.-H. Sue; Wilson Wen Bin Goh
In clinical proteomics, reproducible feature selection is unattainable given the standard statistical hypothesis-testing framework. This leads to irreproducible signatures with no diagnostic power. Instability stems from high P-value variability (p_var), which is inevitable and insolvable. The impact of p_var can be reduced via power increment, for example increasing sample size and measurement accuracy. However, these are not realistic solutions in practice. Instead, workarounds using existing data such as signal boosting transformation techniques and network-based statistical testing is more practical. Furthermore, it is useful to consider other metrics alongside P-values including confidence intervals, effect sizes and cross-validation accuracies to make informed inferences.
Science Advances | 2016
Huimin Wen; Wengang Li; Jiewei Chen; Gen He; Longhua Li; Mark A. Olson; Andrew C.-H. Sue; J. Fraser Stoddart; Xuefeng Guo
The formation dynamics of a host-guest complex is successfully investigated in graphene-based single-molecule electronic devices. Single-molecule electronic devices offer unique opportunities to investigate the properties of individual molecules that are not accessible in conventional ensemble experiments. However, these investigations remain challenging because they require (i) highly precise device fabrication to incorporate single molecules and (ii) sufficient time resolution to be able to make fast molecular dynamic measurements. We demonstrate a graphene-molecule single-molecule junction that is capable of probing the thermodynamic and kinetic parameters of a host-guest complex. By covalently integrating a conjugated molecular wire with a pendent crown ether into graphene point contacts, we can transduce the physical [2]pseudorotaxane (de)formation processes between the electron-rich crown ether and a dicationic guest into real-time electrical signals. The conductance of the single-molecule junction reveals two-level fluctuations that are highly dependent on temperature and solvent environments, affording a nondestructive means of quantitatively determining the binding and rate constants, as well as the activation energies, for host-guest complexes. The thermodynamic processes reveal the host-guest binding to be enthalpy-driven and are consistent with conventional 1H nuclear magnetic resonance titration experiments. This electronic device opens up a new route to developing single-molecule dynamics investigations with microsecond resolution for a broad range of chemical and biochemical applications.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017
Ashwin Narayanan; Dennis Cao; Laszlo Frazer; Alok S. Tayi; Anthea K. Blackburn; Andrew C.-H. Sue; J. B. Ketterson; J. Fraser Stoddart; Samuel I. Stupp
Ferroelectricity in organic materials remains a subject of great interest, given its potential impact as lightweight information storage media. Here we report supramolecular charge-transfer cocrystals formed by electron acceptor and donor molecules that exhibit ferroelectric behavior along two distinct crystallographic axes. The solid-state superstructure of the cocrystals reveals that a 2:1 ratio of acceptor to donor molecules assemble into nearly orthogonal mixed stacks in which the molecules are positioned for charge-transfer in face-to-face and edge-to-face orientations, held together by an extended hydrogen-bonding network. Polarization hysteresis was observed along the face-to-face and edge-to-face axes at room temperature. The noncentrosymmetric nature of the cocrystals, required to observe ferroelectric behavior, is demonstrated using second harmonic generation measurements. This finding suggests the possibility of designing supramolecular arrays in which organic molecules support multidimensional information storage.
Macromolecular Rapid Communications | 2018
Bo Gui; Yi Meng; Yang Xie; Ke Du; Andrew C.-H. Sue; Cheng Wang
Organic-based molecular switches (OMS) are essential components for the ultimate miniaturization of nanoscale electronics and devices. For practical applications, it is often necessary for OMS to be incorporated into functional solid-state materials. However, the switching characteristics of OMS in solution are usually not transferrable to the solid state, presumably because of spatial confinement or inefficient conversion in densely packed solid phase. A promising way to circumvent this issue is harboring the functional OMS within the robust and porous environment of metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) as their organic components. In this feature article, recent research progress of OMS-based MOFs is briefly summarized. The switching behaviors of OMS under different stimuli (e.g., light, redox, pH, etc.) in the MOF state are first introduced. After that, the technological applications of these OMS-based MOFs in different areas, including CO2 adsorption, gas separation, drug delivery, photodynamic therapy, and sensing, are outlined. Finally, perspectives and future challenges are discussed in the conclusion.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2018
Minjie Guo; Xuemei Wang; Caihong Zhan; Paul Demay-Drouhard; Wenjiao Li; Ke Du; Mark A. Olson; Han Zuilhof; Andrew C.-H. Sue
The synthesis of “rim-differentiated” C5-symmetric pillar[5]arenes, whose two rims are decorated with different chemical functionalities, has remained a challenging task. This is due to the inherent statistical nature of the cyclization of 1,4-disubstituted alkoxybenzenes with different substituents, which leads to four constitutional isomers with only 1/16th being rim-differentiated. Herein, we report a “preoriented” synthetic protocol based on FeCl3-catalyzed cyclization of asymmetrically substituted 2,5-dialkoxybenzyl alcohols. This yields an unprecedented 55% selectivity of the C5-symmetric tiara-like pillar[5]arene isomer among four constitutional isomers. Based on this new method, a series of functionalizable tiara-pillar[5]arene derivatives with C5-symmetry was successfully synthesized, isolated, and fully characterized in the solid state.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2018
Dengke Shen; Gang Wang; Zhichang Liu; Peng Li; Kang Cai; Chuyang Cheng; Yi Shi; Ji-Min Han; Chung-Wei Kung; Xirui Gong; Qing-Hui Guo; Hongliang Chen; Andrew C.-H. Sue; Youssry Y. Botros; Antonio Facchetti; Omar K. Farha; Tobin J. Marks; J. Fraser Stoddart
A class of metal-organic frameworks (MOFs)-namely CD-MOFs-obtained from natural products has been grown in an epitaxial fashion as films on the surfaces of glass substrates, which are modified with self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) of γ-cyclodextrin (γ-CD) molecules. The SAMs are created by host-guest complexation of γ-CD molecules with surface-functionalized pyrene units. The CD-MOF films have continuous polycrystalline morphology with a structurally out-of-plane ( c-axial) orientation, covering an area of several square millimeters, with a thickness of ∼2 μm. Furthermore, this versatile host-guest strategy has been applied successfully in the growth of CD-MOFs as the shell on the curved surface of microparticles as well as in the integration of CD-MOF films into electrochemical devices for sensing carbon dioxide. In striking contrast to the control devices prepared from CD-MOF crystalline powders, these CD-MOF film-based devices display an enhancement in proton conductance of up to 300-fold. In addition, the CD-MOF film-based device exhibits more rapid and highly reversible CO2-sensing cycles under ambient conditions, with a 50-fold decrease in conductivity upon exposure to CO2 for 3 s which is recovered within 10 s upon re-exposure to air.